EM Basic – Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC)
AKA “Care Under Fire”
AKA “Care in the immediately unsafe scene”
(This document doesn’t reflect the views or opinions of the Department of Defense, the US Army, the US Air Frorce, the SAUSHEC EM residency program, the Wright-Pratt Department of EM ©2015 EM Basic, Steve Carroll DO. May freely distribute with proper attribution)
Author: Andrew Bohn, MD. Military Emergency Physician/Flight Surgeon
Disclaimers:No financial conflict of interest
Concepts:
Tactical scenes (overall command) is police or combatant chain of command
Good medicine may be bad tactics, bad tactics cause more casualties.
Right intervention at the right time
Relative scene safety – phases of care
Resource constrained environment – most good for the most people
Military vs civilian – battlefield vs. active shooter vs standoff, SABC vs no medical training at all
What causes death?
66% of preventable deaths were extremity hemorrhage
30 % Tension pneumothorax
~3% airway
Selective immobilization – blunt(incl blast) vs penetrating
Care of the enemy combatant
Same standard of care
Disarmed, swept, with a guard
Definitions:
TCCC (TC3, T-Triple-C) – joint military/civilian curriculum, NAEMT/PHTLS
Combine good tactics with best possible medicine
Phases of care:
Care under fire (misnomer)
Tactical Field Care
TACEVAC care
Care Under Fire “Care in the imminently unsafe scene”:
Step 1: Fire superiority on the objective
NO medical care can be rendered when receiving effective enemy
fire. Don’t get dead.
Step 2: Clear the battlefield
a)Casualty collection point (CCP)- defined by TACTICAL COMMAND
- Don’t open your aid bag anywhere else
b)Voice triage- call out to injured
- Walking wounded triaged to SABC in military, “once over” by secondary medic in civilian
- Those who can wave but not walk will probably survive at least another 60 seconds, but likely require intervention of some sort.
c)Physical triage
- START protocol, consider deviation only if very limited number of patients
Step 3: Immediate life saving interventions
a)Tourniquet, high/hasty over clothes
b)Defer any other management
Step 4: Move to CCP (COVER, not merely concealment)
Tactical Field Care “Care in the potentially unsafe scene”– what was a safe place may become unsafe:
MARCH algorithm vs ABCs- MARCH is the better approach, especially with blast or penetrating injuries
Massive hemorrhage, Airway, Respirations, Cardiac, Head injury/Hypothermia
Primary survey, immediate intervention, reassess then delayed intervention
1)Massive hemorrhage
- Reassess tourniquets
- Blood sweep (cut clothes, remove armor)
- DOWNSIDE INJURY
- Strap cutter vs. scissors
- Disarm
- Pack junctional regions PRN
- Specific techniques beyond scope
2)Airway
- Patent, not patent, THREATENED
- No intervention, immediate intervention, potential delayed intervention
- Biggest bang for least time
- Nasal trumpet
- Supraglottic
- ET tube
- Cric
3)Respirations
- Open PTx
- Chest seal, ideally vented
- Evidence of TPTx
- Classic signs are late
- Long needles
- Flail segments
4)Cardiac (pulses)
- Pulse correlation to BP has been debunked, but radial pulse generally = brain perfusion
- Not everyone needs fluids.
5)Head injury/Hypothermia
- DISARM any confused/altered/unresponsive patient
- GENTLY – the weapon is their friend. Enlist another trusted friend
- Avoid further injury
- Head up if possible
- No tight C-collar
- Ensure open airway/respirations
- C-spine immobilization PRN (large blast/ blunt injury, NOT penetrating and/or GLF)
- Avoid hypothermia
- HPMK
- Blankets
- Warm vehicle
6)Fine tune interventions
- Deliberate tourniquet (taped, timed)
- Analgesics
- Antibiotics
- Delayed airway intervention
7)REASSESS
TACEVAC Care (care while leaving the scene)
1)Generally more equipment available
- Monitors
- Oxygen
- Drugs
2)Reassess all interventions (tourniquets, chest movement, pulse)
- Apply monitors
- Fine tune interventions
- Enroute critical care
Review:
1)Right intervention at the right tactical time
2)Death from bleeding, PTx, Airway
3)Fire superiority first
4)MARCH
5)Selective immobilization
6)Be prepared for phase changes
Contact
Steve Carroll
Twitter-@embasic